70s
Music Generator

Recreate the decade that gave us disco, punk, prog rock, and funk. From four-on-the-floor grooves to three-chord rebellion — describe your vision and let Music Agent deliver.

100+ PromptsDecade AuthenticCommercial Ready
Tunee Music Agent
Create a 70s disco track, four-on-the-floor beat, funky bass, lush strings, 120 BPM, Bb major
T
Here's your disco track — driving four-on-the-floor kick, slapped bass groove, sweeping string pads, and wah-wah guitar over a feel-good Bb major progression.

Studio 54 Nights

70s AI

120 BPMBb MajorDisco
Chat with Tunee to create music...

70s Music DNA

Four pillars that define the sound of the 1970s — culture, structure, instruments, and harmony.

01

Origins & Culture

The 1970s splintered into diverse movements — disco united dancefloors, punk rejected excess, prog pushed technical limits, and funk made rhythm king. FM radio and vinyl culture fueled discovery.

02

Song Structure

Pop and disco favored verse-chorus with extended dance breaks. Prog epics spanned 10–20 minutes with multiple movements. Punk stripped songs to under three minutes of raw energy.

03

Signature Instruments

Moog synthesizer, clavinet, wah-wah guitar, Rhodes piano, string sections, slap bass, TR-77 drum machine, and the iconic talkbox.

04

Harmonic Identity

Disco thrived on major-key progressions with lush extensions (7ths, 9ths). Punk used power chords (I–IV–V). Prog explored odd meters and complex modulations. Funk centered on one-chord vamps.

70s Sonic Spectrum

Six defining subgenres of the 1970s — each representing a different movement in a wildly diverse decade.

Disco

110–135 BPM1974–1981

Four-on-the-floor beats, orchestral strings, funky bass, and euphoric dancefloor energy.

Punk Rock

150–200 BPM1976–1980

Fast, stripped-down rock with distorted guitars, shouted vocals, and anti-establishment attitude.

Prog Rock

60–160 BPM1969–1979

Virtuosic instrumentation, complex time signatures, concept albums, and symphonic ambition.

Funk

95–120 BPM1968–1980

Syncopated bass grooves, chicken-scratch guitar, horn stabs, and rhythm-first arrangements.

Glam Rock

110–140 BPM1971–1975

Theatrical rock with stomping beats, piano hooks, and larger-than-life stage personas.

Early Hip-Hop

90–110 BPM1973–1979

Block-party breakbeats, turntablism, MC rhymes, and the birth of DJ culture in the Bronx.

How 70s Styles Compare

See how the major 1970s subgenres differ across tempo, mood, instruments, and complexity.

FeatureDiscoPunkProg RockFunk
BPM Range110–135150–20060–16095–120
Key InstrumentsStrings, bass, drumsGuitar, bass, drumsKeys, guitar, synthBass, clavinet, horns
MoodEuphoric, glamorousAngry, rebelliousEpic, cerebralGroovy, danceable
Typical UseDance scenes, partiesPunk montages, energyArt films, introsFunk playlists, ads
ComplexityMediumLowVery HighMedium–High
Notable ArtistsBee Gees, Donna SummerRamones, Sex PistolsYes, Pink FloydJames Brown, Parliament

Ready-to-Use 70s Prompts

Eight curated prompts covering every major 70s style — copy one and start creating instantly.

01

Mirror Ball Fever

Create a disco track at 120 BPM in Bb major. Four-on-the-floor kick, hi-hat 16ths, slapped bass, lush string pads, wah guitar, and a euphoric chorus build. Mood: Saturday night dancefloor.

DiscoDance
Click to copy
02

No Future Anthem

Generate a punk rock track at 175 BPM in E major. Buzzing power chords, pounding floor tom, aggressive bass, and shouted call-and-response vocals. Mood: three-chord teenage riot.

PunkRaw
Click to copy
03

Cosmic Overture

Produce a prog rock epic at 80 BPM building to 140 BPM in D Dorian. Mellotron intro, Hammond organ solo, 7/8 time signature sections, Moog lead, and a grand orchestral finale. Mood: interstellar voyage.

Prog RockEpic
Click to copy
04

Funky Strut

Compose a funk track at 105 BPM in E minor. Slap bass riff, chicken-scratch guitar, clavinet, tight horn section hits, and a wah-pedal solo. Mood: strut-down-the-street cool.

FunkGroove
Click to copy
05

Glitter Stomp

Create a glam rock anthem at 125 BPM in A major. Stomping piano chords, handclaps, distorted guitar riffs, and a massive sing-along chorus. Mood: sold-out arena spectacle.

Glam RockAnthemic
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06

Block Party

Build an early hip-hop breakbeat at 98 BPM. Looped funk drum break, scratched vinyl stabs, simple bass loop, and crowd noise atmosphere. Mood: 1977 Bronx block party.

Hip-HopBreakbeat
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07

Velvet Lounge

Generate a 70s soft rock ballad at 72 BPM in F major. Rhodes piano, nylon-string guitar, gentle bass, string quartet, and a warm vocal melody. Mood: candlelit evening.

Soft RockMellow
Click to copy
08

Roller Rink

Create an upbeat 70s pop-funk track at 115 BPM in G major. Octave bass line, bright horn riffs, rhythmic guitar scratches, and disco-style hi-hats. Mood: wheels on a wooden floor.

Pop-FunkFun
Click to copy

Where 70s Music Shines

Real-world scenarios where 1970s-inspired music creates the perfect atmosphere.

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Dance & Party Content

Disco and funk grooves for dance videos, workout playlists, and party scene soundtracks.

Three Simple Steps

From idea to finished track — describe, refine, and export your 70s music.

01

Describe Your Vision

Tell Music Agent what kind of track you want — reference a mood, artist, or scene. No jargon needed.

02

Refine Through Chat

Fine-tune BPM, key, instruments, and structure through natural conversation. Iterate until it's perfect.

03

Export & Use

Download your track in high-quality audio. Fully cleared for commercial use — games, videos, ads, and more.

Explore More Genres

Discover related genres and expand your sonic palette.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about creating 70s music with Tunee.

Yes. All Tunee-generated tracks are cleared for commercial use — film, ads, YouTube, podcasts, and games. No royalties or licensing fees.

The AI understands period instruments like Moog synths, clavinet, Rhodes piano, and string arrangements. Specify a subgenre or artist reference for maximum authenticity.

Absolutely. Try 'disco groove with modern EDM drops' or '70s funk bass with trap hi-hats.' The AI handles cross-era fusions seamlessly.

All major ones — disco, punk, prog rock, funk, glam rock, early hip-hop, soft rock, AOR, and more. Mix and match freely.

No. Say '70s dancefloor banger' or 'mellow 70s acoustic vibe' and the AI handles the rest. Add BPM or key only if you have a preference.

Ready to Create Your
70s Music?

From disco dancefloors to punk basements — channel the spirit of the 1970s in minutes.

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